THE AGE OF CONFUSION

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Transcript THE AGE OF CONFUSION

THE AGE OF
CONFUSION
• Ongoing industrialization and WWI
quickened the crumbling of the
“Old Order” – it had staggered
imaginations and left traditional
values open to question
• New intellectual and artistic (and
scientific, political…) trends
sought to fill the void; since the
“rules” had been smashed,
experimentation became the
norm…
• This created an atmosphere of
relativism…many sought refuge in
extremism…
• This process began before the
war…
• The theme of relativism extended into all parts of
society, and Existentialism continued to be the
driving force…
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Life has no absolute meaning…
Individuals are accountable to themselves…
There is no god…
There is no absolute morality…
All that awaits us is the void (le neant)…
There are no rules  total freedom and experimentation…
Jean –Paul Sartre – Huis Clos
Samuel Beckett – Waiting for Godot
• Theatre of the Absurd…
Eugene Ionesco – The Chairs
Freud…
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Psychoanalysis
Id, Ego, Super Ego
Oedipus Complex
The Interpretation
of Dreams
• Freudian slips…
• More confusion…
Surrealism
• James Joyce - Ulysses
• “Stream of
Consciousness”
Salvador Dali: Soft Construction with Boiled Beans (Premonition
of Civil War), 1936
 Late 1920s-1940s.
 Influenced by Freud’s
theories on
psychoanalysis and the
subconscious.
 Confusing & startling
images like those in
dreams.
Themes in Early Modern Art
1. Uncertainty/insecurity.
2. Disillusionment.
3. The subconscious.
4. Overt sexuality.
5. Violence & savagery.
Edvard Munch: The Scream (1893)
Expressionism
 Using bright colors
to express a
particular emotion.
Henri Matisse:
Open Window
(1905)
 The use of intense
colors in a violent,
and uncontrolled
way
 “Wild Beast” =
Fauvism
Gustav Klimt:
Judith I (1901)
Secessionists
 Disrupt the
conservative values of
Viennese society.
 Obsessed with the self.
 Man is a sexual being,
leaning toward despair.
Gustav Klimt: The Kiss (1907-8)
Georges Braque: Violin & Candlestick (1910)
CUBISM
 The subject matter is
broken down, analyzed,
and reassembled in
abstract form.
 Cezanne  The artist
should treat nature in
terms of the cylinder,
the sphere, and the
cone.
Georges Braque:
Woman with a Guitar
(1913)
Wassily Kandinsky: On White II (1923)
Pablo Picasso: Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (1907)
Pablo Picasso:
Woman with a
Flower
(1932)
George Grosz
Grey Day
(1921)
DaDa
 Ridiculed contemporary
culture & traditional
art forms.
 The collapse during
WW I of social and
moral values.
 Nihilistic.
Marcel Duchamp: Fountain (1917)
Walter Gropius: Bauhaus Building (1928)
Bauhaus
 A utopian quality.
 Based on the ideals
of simplified forms
and unadorned
functionalism.
 The belief that the machine economy could deliver
elegantly designed items for the masses.
 Used techniques & materials employed especially in
industrial fabrication & manufacture  steel, concrete,
chrome, glass.
LeCorbusier
Frank Lloyd Wright
MUSIC…
FILM…